If you want to be really good at something, it's going to involve relentlessly pushing past your comfort zone, as well as frustration, struggle, setbacks and failures. That's true as long as you want to continue to improve, or even maintain a high level of excellence. The reward is that being really good at something you've earned through your own hard work can be immensely satisfying.
Here, then, are the six keys to achieving excellence we've found are most effective for our clients:
- Pursue what you love. Passion is an incredible motivator. It fuels focus, resilience, and perseverance.
- Do the hardest work first. We all move instinctively toward pleasure and away from pain. Most great performers, Ericsson and others have found, delay gratification and take on the difficult work of practice in the mornings, before they do anything else. That's when most of us have the most energy and the fewest distractions.
- Practice intensely, without interruption for short
periods of no longer than 90 minutes and then take a break. Ninety
minutes appears to be the maximum amount of time that we can bring the
highest level of focus to any given activity. The evidence is equally
strong that great performers practice no more than 4 ½ hours a day.
- Seek expert feedback, in intermittent doses. The
simpler and more precise the feedback, the more equipped you are to make
adjustments. Too much feedback, too continuously can create cognitive
overload, increase anxiety, and interfere with learning.
- Take regular renewal breaks. Relaxing after
intense effort not only provides an opportunity to rejuvenate, but also
to metabolize and embed learning. It's also during rest that the right
hemisphere becomes more dominant, which can lead to creative
breakthroughs.
- Ritualize practice. Will and discipline are wildly overrated. As the researcher Roy Baumeister has found, none of us have very much of it. The best way to insure you'll take on difficult tasks is to build rituals — specific, inviolable times at which you do them, so that over time you do them without having to squander energy thinking about them.
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